OLD-TIME DETECTION, Autumn 2016

In the latest issue of OLD-TIME DETECTION, editor Arthur Vidro and his cohorts have amassed lots of information about the Golden Age of detective fiction, a period which is enjoying a renaissance of sorts thanks to electronic publishing and how it's retrieving these works from undeserved obscurity.Among the highlights of Issue 43: News about Agatha Christie revivals — a modern review of an eighty-plus-year-old novel — a concise account of a thriller writer with his own unique style — an article about THE Chinese-American detective and his creator — a couple of items concerning detective fiction's Golden Age — two (count 'em, two) pieces of fiction relating to Isaac Asimov as mystery writer, plus an apologia from the Good Doctor justifying his affection for classic detective stories — and other smart reviews scattered throughout.All in all, a fine issue.

CONTENTS:(1) FROM THE EDITOR by Arthur Vidro:"The very first issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, dated Fall 1941, contained an error on its cover. Your editor created a story around that error." Related: (HERE).(2) CHRISTIE CORNER by Dr. John Curran:". . . the big, and as yet unanswered, question is: 'What will happen to Poirot?' Will a new actor don the spats and moustache? Unthinkable! Or, as in the current French TV series, is he to be excised completely from the plot?"

(3) MEGA-REVIEW: The Deadly Dowager (1934) reviewed by Michael Dirda (2016):"Though she lacks magical powers, Greenwood's deadly dowager emerges as one of the great witches of modern literature, insidious, cruel, hypocritical, and inveterately manipu-lative."

(4) MURDER IN PRINT by Jon L. Breen (1983):"As observers of the book market know, publication patterns have been changing in recent years." Related: (HERE).

(5) DORNFORD YATES by J. Randolph Cox:"The books of Dornford Yates are an acquired taste for some readers. His style has an elegance that resembles no other artisan in the English language . . ." Related: (HERE).

(6) EARL DERR BIGGERS AND CHARLIE CHAN by Marvin Lachman:"By now, you'll notice that I've fallen into the trap of discussing the Chan movies, not my intent at all for the books are different — and far better."

(7) THE GOLDEN AGE OF THE DETECTIVE STORY: ITS RISE AND FALL by Charles Shibuk (1969):"However you date it or define it, the Golden Age was the great period of the detective story, but alas, like all good things it had to come to an end. The reasons for this are numerous . . ." Related: (HERE).

(8) MY, HOW MYSTERIES HAVE CHANGED by Chris Ketcham: Comparing and (more to the point) contrasting Sayers's Busman's Honeymoon (1937) with Evanovich's Top Secret Twenty-One (2014).

(9) "I'M OLD-FASHIONED" by Isaac Asimov (1977):"I'm in a terrible situation. I like old-fashioned mysteries."

(10) FICTION: "The Men Who Read Isaac Asimov" (1978) by William Brittain (8 pages):"Are you telling us you've got the right solution? What are the numbers? How did you get them?"

(15) THE READERS WRITE:"I've seen many 'Best Lists' in my time, but the Kabatchnik-Aucott list is the best Best List I've ever seen."(16) PUZZLE:"Below are illustrations of seven all-time detectives, some of them amateur, some of them professional. The question here is for you to identify . . . the talented artist who drew them."